Spain town reintroduces peseta to boost economy.
Posted: 06 Mar 2011, 13:13
EDIT
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This is the start of the breakup of the euro, I think.TroubledTimes wrote:A small town in northern Spain has decided to reintroduce the old Spanish currency - the peseta - alongside the euro to give the local economy a lift.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-12657225
Yes, except in this case the "local" currency in question is national. What is to stop every small town in Spain doing the same thing, with the same currency?Prono 007 wrote:Maybe they're opting for the Transition Towns economic philosophy of using local currencies.
Most Germans will be breathing a sigh of relief.UndercoverElephant wrote:This is the start of the breakup of the euro, I think.TroubledTimes wrote:A small town in northern Spain has decided to reintroduce the old Spanish currency - the peseta - alongside the euro to give the local economy a lift.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-12657225
Why would shops take it into banks? Why would the banks take it? How would they decide what it was worth?rue_d_etropal wrote:There is only a finite amout of the old money, and assuming the shops take it into banks then it will be lost in system.
Banks dont "like" taking notes after the date, but they do, for business users anyway.That cash can still be converted today, but only at the Bank of Spain itself,